United Airlines flight attendant, 83, lands in Guinness book for longest tenure

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12 years 2 months ago #1 by riada
United Airlines flight attendant, 83, lands in Guinness book for longest tenure


In 63 years, Ron Akana has seen it all—from 35,000 feet in the air, that is.

The 83-year-old United Airlines flight attendant will appear in the Guinness World Records book in October for having the "longest career as a flight attendant" in the world.

Akana, now a Boulder, Colo. resident, finished up his final route last weekend on a United Airlines flight from Denver to Kauai, The Associated Press reported.

"I wasn't expecting this much attention," he told the AP on Tuesday.

His airborne days started in 1949, when he was a student at the University of Hawaii and his friends saw a newspaper ad.

"We didn't even know what a flight steward was," he told the AP. "But it meant getting to the mainland, which was a huge deal in those days."

He became one of United's first male flight attendants: "We just liked working with girls," he told the AP.

With the exception of two years away to serve in the Korean War, Akana has been in the skies ever since.

In over six decades, he has seen the transformation of air travel. He saw meal service improve, the start of in-flight movies, passengers go from dressing up to dressing down, smoking become a federal offense and tighter security in the post-9/11 world.

After being offered a buyout, he is retiring, the AP reported.

"It was a job that started to grow on a person. I always flew with new personalities," Akana told Boulder's Daily Camera. "I know I'll miss it, but the time has come. Aching bones and joints."

But his frequent flier days are far from over: In his retirement, Akana plans to travel frequently with his wife, the Daily Camera reported.

"I got terrific travel privileges," he told the AP, adding: "There's a lot to be seen."

Akana will miss the passengers and fellow crew members the most: "It's the people I worked with," he told the Daily Camera. "They always had interesting experiences that we all became part of."

"We are grateful for Ron’s many years of service and wish him well in his retirement," said United spokesperson Charles Hobart, in a written statement.


Nor but in sleep findeth a cure for care.
Incertainty that once gave scope to dream
Of laughing enterprise and glory untold,
Is now a blackness that no stars redeem.

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